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History of Feminism
Showing Original Post only (View all)Why I am not Charlie [View all]
There is no but about what happened at Charlie Hebdo yesterday. Some people published some cartoons, and some other people killed them for it. Words and pictures can be beautiful or vile, pleasing or enraging, inspiring or offensive; but they exist on a different plane from physical violence, whether you want to call that plane spirit or imagination or culture, and to meet them with violence is an offense against the spirit and imagination and culture that distinguish humans. Nothing mitigates this monstrosity. There will be time to analyze why the killers did it, time to parse their backgrounds, their ideologies, their beliefs, time for sociologists and psychologists to add to understanding. There will be explanations, and the explanations will be important, but explanations arent the same as excuses. Words dont kill, they must not be met by killing, and they will not make the killers culpability go away.
To abhor what was done to the victims, though, is not the same as to become them. This is true on the simplest level: I cannot occupy someone elses selfhood, share someone elses death. This is also true on a moral level: I cannot appropriate the dangers they faced or the suffering they underwent, I cannot colonize their experience, and it is arrogant to make out that I can. It wouldnt be necessary to say this, except the flood of hashtags and avatars and social-media posturing proclaiming #JeSuisCharlie overwhelms distinctions and elides the point. We must all try to be Charlie, not just today but every day, the New Yorker pontificates. What the hell does that mean? In real life, solidarity takes many forms, almost all of them hard. This kind of low-cost, risk-free, E-Z solidarity is only possible in a social-media age, where you can strike a pose and somebody sees it on their timeline for 15 seconds and then they move on and its forgotten except for the feeling of accomplishment it gave you. Solidarity is hard because it isnt about imaginary identifications, its about struggling across the canyon of not being someone else: its about recognizing, for instance, that somebody died because they were different from you, in what they did or believed or were or wore, not because they were the same. If people who are feeling concrete loss or abstract shock or indignation take comfort in proclaiming a oneness that seems to fill the void, then it serves an emotional end. But these Cartesian credos on Facebook and Twitter I am Charlie, therefore I am shouldnt be
Erasing differences that actually exist seems to be the purpose here: and its perhaps appropriate to the Charlie cartoons, which drew their force from a considered contempt for people with the temerity to be different. For the last 36 hours, everybodys been quoting Voltaire. The same line is all over my several timelines:
Those 21 words circling the globe speak louder than gunfire and represent every pen being wielded by an outstretched arm, an Australian news site says. (Never mind that Voltaire never wrote them; one of his biographers did.) But most people who mouth them dont mean them. Instead, theyre subtly altering the Voltairean clarion cry: the message today is, I have to agree with what you say, in order to defend it. Why else the insistence that condemning the killings isnt enough? No: we all have to endorse the cartoons, and not just that, but republish them ourselves. Thus Index on Censorship, a journal that used to oppose censorship but now is in the business of telling people what they can and cannot say, called for all newspapers to reprint the drawings: We believe that only through solidarity in showing that we truly defend all those who exercise their right to speak freely can we defeat those who would use violence to silence free speech. But is repeating you the same as defending you? And is it really solidarity when, instead of engaging across our differences, I just mindlessly parrot what you say?
http://paper-bird.net/2015/01/09/why-i-am-not-charlie/
To abhor what was done to the victims, though, is not the same as to become them. This is true on the simplest level: I cannot occupy someone elses selfhood, share someone elses death. This is also true on a moral level: I cannot appropriate the dangers they faced or the suffering they underwent, I cannot colonize their experience, and it is arrogant to make out that I can. It wouldnt be necessary to say this, except the flood of hashtags and avatars and social-media posturing proclaiming #JeSuisCharlie overwhelms distinctions and elides the point. We must all try to be Charlie, not just today but every day, the New Yorker pontificates. What the hell does that mean? In real life, solidarity takes many forms, almost all of them hard. This kind of low-cost, risk-free, E-Z solidarity is only possible in a social-media age, where you can strike a pose and somebody sees it on their timeline for 15 seconds and then they move on and its forgotten except for the feeling of accomplishment it gave you. Solidarity is hard because it isnt about imaginary identifications, its about struggling across the canyon of not being someone else: its about recognizing, for instance, that somebody died because they were different from you, in what they did or believed or were or wore, not because they were the same. If people who are feeling concrete loss or abstract shock or indignation take comfort in proclaiming a oneness that seems to fill the void, then it serves an emotional end. But these Cartesian credos on Facebook and Twitter I am Charlie, therefore I am shouldnt be
Erasing differences that actually exist seems to be the purpose here: and its perhaps appropriate to the Charlie cartoons, which drew their force from a considered contempt for people with the temerity to be different. For the last 36 hours, everybodys been quoting Voltaire. The same line is all over my several timelines:
Those 21 words circling the globe speak louder than gunfire and represent every pen being wielded by an outstretched arm, an Australian news site says. (Never mind that Voltaire never wrote them; one of his biographers did.) But most people who mouth them dont mean them. Instead, theyre subtly altering the Voltairean clarion cry: the message today is, I have to agree with what you say, in order to defend it. Why else the insistence that condemning the killings isnt enough? No: we all have to endorse the cartoons, and not just that, but republish them ourselves. Thus Index on Censorship, a journal that used to oppose censorship but now is in the business of telling people what they can and cannot say, called for all newspapers to reprint the drawings: We believe that only through solidarity in showing that we truly defend all those who exercise their right to speak freely can we defeat those who would use violence to silence free speech. But is repeating you the same as defending you? And is it really solidarity when, instead of engaging across our differences, I just mindlessly parrot what you say?
http://paper-bird.net/2015/01/09/why-i-am-not-charlie/
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Thank you for posting this. Puts into words what has been circling in my mind these past days =
Tuesday Afternoon
Jan 2015
#1
assimilation, yes. with an equal exchange of ideals, mores and cultures. NOT appropriation.
Tuesday Afternoon
Jan 2015
#5